These docs are for Cribl Edge 4.8 and are no longer actively maintained.
See the latest version (4.13).
Sumo Logic Destination
Cribl Edge can send logs and metrics to Sumo Logic over HTTP. Sumo Logic offers a Hosted Collector that supports HTTP Sources to receive data over an HTTP POST request.
To send traces to Sumo Logic you can use Cribl’s OpenTelemetry Destination pointing to Sumo Logic’s OTLP/HTTP Source.
Type: Streaming | TLS Support: Configurable | PQ Support: Yes
How Sumo Logic Handles Data
- When an event contains the internal field
__criblMetrics
, it’s sent to Sumo Logic as a metric event. Otherwise, it’s sent as a log event. - Data sent to Sumo Logic needs to be UTF-8 encoded and they recommend a data payload have a size, before compression, of 100 KB to 1 MB.
- Sumo Logic may impose throttling and caps on your log ingestion to prevent your account from using On-Demand Capacity, see Sumo Logic’s manage ingestion documentation for details.
Prerequisites
In Sumo Logic, create or retrieve an HTTP Logs and Metrics Source’s unique endpoint URL. See Sumo Logic’s HTTP Logs and Metrics Source documentation for details. You will need the Manage Collectors
role capability in Sumo Logic.
After creating the Source in Sumo Logic, the URL associated with the Source is displayed. Copy the endpoint URL so you can enter it when you configure the Cribl Edge Sumo Logic Destination.
Configure a Sumo Logic Destination
In Cribl Edge, set up a Sumo Logic Destination.
From the top nav, click Manage, then select a Fleet to configure. Next, you have two options:
- To configure via QuickConnect, click Routing then QuickConnect (Cribl Stream) or Collect (Cribl Edge). Next, click Add Destination and from the resulting drawer’s tiles, select Sumo Logic. Next, click either Add Destination or (if displayed) Select Existing.
- To configure via Routes, click Data then Destinations (Cribl Stream) or More then Destinations (Cribl Edge). Select Sumo Logic from the list of tiles or the Destinations left nav. Next, click Add Destination to open a New Destination modal.
In the Destination modal, configure the following under General Settings:
- Output ID: Enter a unique name to identify this Sumo Logic Destination definition. If you clone this Destination, Cribl Edge will add
-CLONE
to the original Output ID. - API URL: Enter the endpoint URL of the Sumo Logic HTTP Source. This is provided by Sumo Logic after creating the Source, see prerequisites for details. For example,
https://endpoint6.collection.us2.sumologic.com/receiver/v1/http/<long-hash>
.
- Output ID: Enter a unique name to identify this Sumo Logic Destination definition. If you clone this Destination, Cribl Edge will add
Next, you can configure the following Optional Settings:
- Custom source name and Custom source category are unique settings to Sumo Logic. These allow you to override the Sumo Logic HTTP Source’s Source Name and Source Category values with HTTP headers. Alternatively, you can define the
__sourceName
and__sourceCategory
fields on events to assign a custom value at the event level.
The remaining configurations are Cribl settings that you’ll find across many Cribl Destinations.
- Backpressure behavior: Whether to block, drop, or queue events when all receivers are exerting backpressure.
- Tags: Optionally, add tags that you can use to filter and group Destinations in Cribl Edge’s Manage Destinations page. These tags aren’t added to processed events. Use a tab or hard return between (arbitrary) tag names.
- Data Format: This drop-down defaults to
JSON
. Change this toRaw
if you prefer to preserve outbound events’ raw format instead of JSONifying them.
- Custom source name and Custom source category are unique settings to Sumo Logic. These allow you to override the Sumo Logic HTTP Source’s Source Name and Source Category values with HTTP headers. Alternatively, you can define the
Optionally, configure any Persistent Queue, Processing, Retries, and Advanced settings outlined in the below sections.
Requests to Sumo Logic are created in separate batches for each unique combination of Source Name and Source Category within the event payload. If you have a large number of unique pairs, this could lead to many individual batches being held in memory at any given time. You can increase the Buffer memory limit to give more memory allowance for buffering outgoing requests, allowing batches to grow larger before being flushed. The default flushing mechanism would discard smaller batches before they reach an expected size due to reaching the Buffer memory limit.
Click Save, then Commit & Deploy.
Verify that data is searchable in Sumo Logic. See the Verify Data Flow section below.
Persistent Queue Settings
This tab is displayed when the Backpressure behavior is set to Persistent Queue.
On Cribl-managed Cribl.Cloud Workers (with an Enterprise plan), this tab exposes only the destructive Clear Persistent Queue button (described below in this section). A maximum queue size of 1 GB disk space is automatically allocated per PQ‑enabled Destination, per Worker Process. The 1 GB limit is on outbound uncompressed data, and no compression is applied to the queue.
This limit is not configurable. If the queue fills up, Cribl Edge will block outbound data. To configure the queue size, compression, queue-full fallback behavior, and other options below, use a hybrid Group.
Max file size: The maximum data volume to store in each queue file before closing it. Enter a numeral with units of KB, MB, etc. Defaults to 1 MB
.
Max queue size: The maximum amount of disk space that the queue is allowed to consume on each Worker Process. Once this limit is reached, this Destination will stop queueing data and apply the Queue‑full behavior. Required, and defaults to 5
GB. Accepts positive numbers with units of KB
, MB
, GB
, etc. Can be set as high as 1 TB
, unless you’ve configured a different Max PQ size per Worker Process in Fleet Settings.
Queue file path: The location for the persistent queue files. Defaults to $CRIBL_HOME/state/queues
. To this value, Cribl Edge will append /<worker‑id>/<output‑id>
.
Compression: Codec to use to compress the persisted data, once a file is closed. Defaults to None
; Gzip
is also available.
Queue-full behavior: Whether to block or drop events when the queue is exerting backpressure (because disk is low or at full capacity). Block is the same behavior as non-PQ blocking, corresponding to the Block option on the Backpressure behavior drop-down. Drop new data throws away incoming data, while leaving the contents of the PQ unchanged.
Clear Persistent Queue: Click this “panic” button if you want to delete the files that are currently queued for delivery to this Destination. A confirmation modal will appear - because this will free up disk space by permanently deleting the queued data, without delivering it to downstream receivers. (Appears only after Output ID has been defined.)
Strict ordering: The default Yes
position enables FIFO (first in, first out) event forwarding. When receivers recover, Cribl Edge will send earlier queued events before forwarding newly arrived events. To instead prioritize new events before draining the queue, toggle this off. Doing so will expose this additional control:
- Drain rate limit (EPS): Optionally, set a throttling rate (in events per second) on writing from the queue to receivers. (The default
0
value disables throttling.) Throttling the queue’s drain rate can boost the throughput of new/active connections, by reserving more resources for them. You can further optimize Workers’ startup connections and CPU load at Fleet Settings > Worker Processes.
Processing Settings
Post‑Processing
Pipeline: Pipeline to process data before sending the data out using this output.
System fields: A list of fields to automatically add to events that use this output. By default, includes cribl_pipe
(identifying the Cribl Edge Pipeline that processed the event). Supports wildcards. Other options include:
cribl_host
– Cribl Edge Node that processed the event.cribl_input
– Cribl Edge Source that processed the event.cribl_output
– Cribl Edge Destination that processed the event.cribl_route
– Cribl Edge Route (or QuickConnect) that processed the event.cribl_wp
– Cribl Edge Worker Process that processed the event.
Retries
Honor Retry-After header: Whether to honor a Retry-After
header, provided that the header specifies a delay no longer than 180 seconds. Cribl Stream/Edge limits the delay to 180 seconds even if the Retry-After
header specifies a longer delay. When enabled, any Retry-After
header received takes precedence over all other options configured in the Retries section. When disabled, all Retry-After
headers are ignored.
Settings for failed HTTP requests: When you want to automatically retry requests that receive particular HTTP response status codes, use these settings to list those response codes.
For any HTTP response status codes that are not explicitly configured for retries, Cribl Stream/Edge applies the following rules:
Status Code | Action |
---|---|
Any in the 1xx , 3xx , or 4xx series | Drop the request |
Any in the 5xx series | Retry the request |
Upon receiving a response code that’s on the list, Cribl Stream/Edge first waits for a set time interval called the Pre-backoff interval and then begins retrying the request. Time between retries increases based on an exponential backoff algorithm whose base is the Backoff multiplier, until the backoff multiplier reaches the Backoff limit (ms). At that point, Cribl Stream/Edge continues retrying the request without increasing the time between retries any further.
If the sender (which manages the connection to the Destination) is at capacity, it will not accept any incoming events. These incoming events originate internally from a previous stage of the data flow when Destinations send outbound requests to their respective external services, and they include retry requests and new requests. Any events that were already in transit when the sender reached capacity will continue to be processed downstream.
Sender capacity is freed up when an outgoing request succeeds or encounters a non-retryable error. When the sender has available capacity again, it will resume accepting incoming events. This capacity management is influenced by the number of active connections and configured limits, such as concurrency and buffer sizes. If a Pipeline sends events faster than the Destination can process, the buffers may fill up, leading to backpressure and Sender at capacity
warnings. This backpressure prevents the sender from accepting additional requests until capacity is restored.
By default, this Destination has no response codes configured for automatic retries. For each response code you want to add to the list, select Add Setting and configure the following settings:
- HTTP status code: A response code that indicates a failed request, for example
429 (Too Many Requests)
or503 (Service Unavailable)
. - Pre-backoff interval (ms): The amount of time to wait before beginning retries, in milliseconds. Defaults to
1000
(one second). - Backoff multiplier: The base for the exponential backoff algorithm. A value of
2
(the default) means that Cribl Stream/Edge will retry after 2 seconds, then 4 seconds, then 8 seconds, and so on. - Backoff limit (ms): The maximum backoff interval Cribl Stream/Edge should apply for its final retry, in milliseconds. Default (and minimum) is
10,000
(10 seconds); maximum is180,000
(180 seconds, or 3 minutes).
Retry timed-out HTTP requests: When you want to automatically retry requests that have timed out, toggle this control on to display the following settings for configuring retry behavior:
- Pre-backoff interval (ms): The amount of time to wait before beginning retries, in milliseconds. Defaults to
1000
(one second). - Backoff multiplier: The base for the exponential backoff algorithm. A value of
2
(the default) means that Cribl Stream/Edge will retry after 2 seconds, then 4 seconds, then 8 seconds, and so on. - Backoff limit (ms): The maximum backoff interval Cribl Stream/Edge should apply for its final retry, in milliseconds. Default (and minimum) is
10,000
(10 seconds); maximum is180,000
(180 seconds, or 3 minutes).
Advanced Settings
Validate server certs: Toggle to Yes
to reject certificates that are not authorized by a CA in the CA certificate path, nor by another trusted CA (for example, the system’s CA).
Round-robin DNS: Toggle on to enable round-robin DNS lookup across multiple IP addresses, IPv4 and IPv6. When a DNS server resolves a Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) to multiple IP addresses, Cribl Edge will sequentially use each address in the order they are returned by the DNS server for subsequent connection attempts.
Compress: Compresses the payload body before sending. Defaults to Yes
(recommended).
Request timeout: Amount of time (in seconds) to wait for a request to complete before aborting it. Defaults to 30
.
Request concurrency: Maximum number of concurrent requests per Worker Process. When Cribl Edge hits this limit, it begins throttling traffic to the downstream service. Defaults to 5
. Minimum: 1
. Maximum: 32
.
Max body size (KB): Maximum size of the request body before compression. Defaults to 1024
KB. The actual request body size might exceed the specified value because the Destination adds bytes when it writes to the downstream receiver. Cribl recommends that you experiment with the Max body size value until downstream receivers reliably accept all events.
Buffer memory limit (KB): Total amount of memory used to buffer outgoing requests waiting to be sent. If left blank, defaults to 5 times the max body size (if set). If 0, no limit is enforced. This provides granular control over the memory allocated for buffering outgoing batched requests. Increasing the limit allows batches to grow larger before being flushed, improving efficiency for data with high cardinality (a large number of unique batches). Finding the optimal balance between efficient data transfer and memory usage involves adjusting both the Buffer memory limit and Max Body Size settings.
Max events per request: Maximum number of events to include in the request body. The 0
default allows unlimited events.
Flush period (sec): Maximum time between requests. Low values could cause the payload size to be smaller than its configured maximum. Defaults to 1
.
Extra HTTP headers: Name-value pairs to pass as additional HTTP headers. Values will be sent encrypted.
Failed request logging mode: Use this drop-down to determine which data should be logged when a request fails. Select among None
(the default), Payload
, or Payload + Headers
. With this last option, Cribl Edge will redact all headers, except non-sensitive headers that you declare below in Safe headers.
Safe headers: Add headers to declare them as safe to log in plaintext. (Sensitive headers such as authorization
will always be redacted, even if listed here.) Use a tab or hard return to separate header names.
Environment: If you’re using GitOps, optionally use this field to specify a single Git branch on which to enable this configuration. If empty, the config will be enabled everywhere.
Verify Data Flow
To verify data flow, we’ll use the Destination’s Test feature while running a Live Tail session in Sumo Logic.
In Sumo Logic, run a new Live Tail session against the name of the HTTP Logs and Metrics Source or the Custom source name you defined when you configured the Sumo Logic Destination. You’ll need to use the
_source
metadata field. For example, if the name of the Source isHTTP
your search would be_source="HTTP"
. Ensure you’ve clicked the Run button to start the Live Tail session.In Cribl Edge, open the Destination configuration modal and select the Test tab. You can leave the default data or select from the available samples. Click Run Test.

- Look back to your Sumo Logic Live Tail session and you should see the sample data from the Cribl test displayed in your Live Tail results.

Troubleshooting
If you receive an error when verifying data flow, take note of the response code and reference Sumo Logic’s documentation for common issues to investigate.
The Destination’s configuration modal has helpful tabs for troubleshooting:
Live Data: Try capturing live data to see real-time events as they flow through the Destination. On the Live Data tab, click Start Capture to begin viewing real-time data.
Logs: Review and search the logs that provide detailed information about the delivery process, including any errors or warnings that may have occurred.
Test: Ensures that the Destination is correctly set up and reachable. Verify that sample events are sent correctly by clicking Run Test.
You can also view the Monitoring page that provides a comprehensive overview of data volume and rate, helping you identify delivery issues. Analyze the graphs showing events and bytes in/out over time.
Notes on HTTP-Based Outputs
To proxy outbound HTTP/S requests, see System Proxy Configuration.
Cribl Edge will attempt to use keepalives to reuse a connection for multiple requests. After two minutes of the first use, the connection will be thrown away, and a new one will be reattempted. This is to prevent sticking to a particular destination when there is a constant flow of events.
If the server does not support keepalives (or if the server closes a pooled connection while idle), a new connection will be established for the next request.
When resolving the Destination’s hostname, Cribl Edge will pick the first IP in the list for use in the next connection. Enable Round-robin DNS to better balance distribution of events between destination cluster nodes.